Clara: The (Mostly) True Story of the Rhinoceros Who Dazzled Kings

It’s pretty astonishing that an animal dubbed as “monstrous” and “frightful” could win the hearts of people from one end of Europe to the other, but that is exactly what happens in author Emily Arnold McCully’s latest adorable picture book, Clara: The (Mostly) True Story of the Rhinoceros Who Dazzled Kings, Inspired Artists and Won the Hearts of Everyone…While She Ate Her Way Up and Down a Continent!

In the book, an old Dutch sea captain named Van der Meer longs to leave his lonely sea life. When he visits a friend in India and is greeted by an astonishing creature—a thick, sturdy rhinoceros with soft, smiling eyes, he knows just what he will do next. Europeans believe that rhinos are mythical, so Van der Meer decides that he will haul the rhinoceros all around Europe and charge people to see her. His friend agrees to sell her, so the good captain hoists her onto his ship and proceeds to “show” her to all who will pay.

As they arrive at each destination, Clara (as she is called) is hauled around in the wooden wagon built just for her. She meets all sorts of royalty: Frederick the Great, king of Prussia; Empress Maria Theresa of Vienna; Frederick II of Hesse; and Louis XV of Europe. She also meets plenty of commoners, and they all love her so much that the women insist on wearing their hair as high atop their heads as possible, to mimic the horn that has magically appeared on Clara’s forehead. They also wear specially tailored gowns call la rhinoceros to honor Clara. Before long, painters paint Clara, the French navy christens a new ship for her, and everyone flocks to see the beast with the noble eyes.

As the years go by, Clara gets bigger and bigger. One day she’s much too big to ride in her wagon, so a bigger and sturdier wagon must be built. Another day her “magic” horn falls off, and an even bigger horn grows to replace it. Clara eventually becomes so humongous that she almost literally eats captain Van der Meer out of house and home. In fact, sometimes he goes hungry just so that she can eat. But it’s all worth it for him. His “Clarakin,” as he calls her, is the perfect companion for his lonely soul.

Readers young and old will learn plenty when they read this book. They’ll learn that rhinos dry up in the sun unless they have access to water (or in Clara’s case, fish oil from the sea). They’ll learn that ships from the olden times typically carried live animals like chickens, goats, and pigs so that they would have fresh milk, eggs–and possibly bacon (although slaughtering pigs was never mentioned). They’ll learn that a rhino’s horn falls off like a fingernail or toenail, and another one eventually grows in its place. But perhaps most astonishing of all, they’ll learn just what an animal that weighs more than five thousand pounds eats and drinks every single day: namely, oranges, grass, thirty loaves of bread, one hundred pounds of hay, and fourteen buckets of water and beer. Of course, years later, society has learned that this is not the proper diet for a rhino, but it certainly kept Clara alive and kicking for many years.

This book is a history, zoology and geography lesson all rolled into five thousand pounds of soulful-eyed fun. It should be noted that the text seems wordy at first sight—especially considering that the book specifically targets ages 4 to 8. However, the story is so amazing, and the full, sweeping illustrations are so adorable that the wordiness seems to disappear into thin air, much like those hundreds of pounds of food that Clara gulped down every day.

Great for animal lovers, history buffs, and students of early travel and geography.